Materiality Explained: Why Auditors Don’t Check Every Transaction
One of the most common questions SME owners ask during an audit is:
“Why didn’t the auditor check everything?”
At first glance, this sounds reasonable. If an audit is meant to verify the financial statements, shouldn’t every invoice, receipt, and bank transaction be reviewed?
The short answer is no—and the reason is materiality.
This article explains materiality in plain English, why auditors rely on it, how it works in practice in Singapore audits, and what SME directors should understand to avoid unnecessary tension and misunderstandings during the audit process.
What Is Materiality? (Plain-English Definition)
In simple terms, materiality asks one key question:
Would this matter to someone using the financial statements to make decisions?
If the answer is yes, it is material.
If the answer is no, it is not material.
Materiality recognises that:
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Financial statements are summaries, not transaction listings
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Users care about the big picture, not immaterial details
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Absolute precision is neither practical nor necessary
Why Auditors Cannot (and Should Not) Check Everything
Imagine an SME with:
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10,000 sales invoices
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6,000 expense claims
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12 bank accounts
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Hundreds of journal entries
Checking every transaction would mean:
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Audits would take months
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Audit fees would be unaffordable
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Financial reporting would become impractical
More importantly, it would not improve audit quality.
Auditors aim to provide reasonable assurance, not absolute certainty. Materiality is what makes this possible.
The Purpose of an Audit (Often Misunderstood)
An audit does not mean:
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“Every transaction is correct”
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“There are no errors at all”
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“Nothing can ever go wrong”
An audit means:
“There is no material misstatement in the financial statements.”
This wording is deliberate and consistent with international auditing standards applied in Singapore.
Materiality in the Singapore Context
Audits in Singapore follow International Standards on Auditing (ISAs), which are adopted and enforced by regulators such as Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority.
These standards require auditors to:
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Set materiality at the planning stage
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Focus audit work on higher-risk and higher-impact areas
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Use professional judgment rather than mechanical checking
Materiality is therefore not optional—it is a core audit principle.
How Auditors Set Materiality (Conceptually)
Auditors do not pick materiality randomly. They typically consider:
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Profit before tax
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Revenue
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Total assets
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Equity
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Nature of the business
For example:
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A $5,000 error may be material for a small dormant company
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The same $5,000 is immaterial for a $20 million turnover SME
Materiality is relative, not absolute.
Performance Materiality: Why Even Material Items May Not Be Fully Tested
In addition to overall materiality, auditors also apply performance materiality.
This is a lower threshold used to:
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Reduce the risk that many small errors add up to a material one
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Determine sample sizes
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Decide how much testing is enough
This explains why:
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Not every large balance is fully tested
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Sampling is used even for material areas
Why Auditors Use Sampling Instead of Full Testing
Sampling Reflects How Businesses Actually Operate
Auditors assume:
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Errors tend to follow patterns
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Systemic issues show up in samples
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One-off immaterial errors are unavoidable in real businesses
Sampling allows auditors to:
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Identify trends
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Assess controls
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Focus on risk areas
Checking everything would dilute focus, not improve insight.
Common SME Frustrations (And the Real Reasons Behind Them)
“They Didn’t Check This Invoice — Isn’t That Risky?”
If an invoice:
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Is small
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Is routine
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Does not indicate control weaknesses
Then it is unlikely to affect users’ decisions and is therefore immaterial.
“They Focused on This One Adjustment Too Much”
Auditors often spend more time on:
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Estimates
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Provisions
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Related party transactions
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Unusual or non-recurring items
This is because:
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Judgment is involved
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These items can materially affect profit or balance sheet
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Risk is higher than routine transactions
“They Ignored Small Errors”
Small errors may be:
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Not material individually
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Not material in aggregate
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Corrected through management representation instead of adjustments
This is normal audit practice.
Materiality Is Not a Free Pass for Errors
A critical misunderstanding is thinking:
“If it’s immaterial, it doesn’t matter.”
This is not true.
Auditors still consider:
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Nature of the error
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Whether it indicates control weaknesses
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Whether it is intentional
For example:
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Fraud is material by nature, even if small in value
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Related party misstatements matter even if amounts are small
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Regulatory non-compliance can be material regardless of dollars
Materiality is about impact, not excuses.
Qualitative Materiality: When Small Amounts Still Matter
Some items are material even if the numbers are small, such as:
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Director remuneration disclosures
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Related party transactions
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Breaches of laws or loan covenants
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Grant compliance items
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Misclassification that changes profit to loss
Auditors look beyond numbers to context.
How Materiality Affects Audit Adjustments
During audits, you may hear:
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“This adjustment is immaterial”
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“We will pass this adjustment”
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“We will list this as an unadjusted difference”
This does not mean the auditor missed it.
It means:
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The auditor identified the issue
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Assessed its impact
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Concluded it does not affect the overall true and fair view
These items are usually documented internally.
Why Auditors Sometimes Insist on “Small” Adjustments
SMEs are often surprised when auditors insist on adjusting:
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$8,000
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$12,000
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$15,000
Even though larger errors exist elsewhere.
Reasons include:
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The adjustment affects a sensitive area (e.g. directors’ accounts)
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It changes compliance outcomes
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It relates to a high-risk judgment area
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It has qualitative significance
Materiality is not just about size.
What Directors Should Understand About Their Role
Directors sometimes assume:
“If auditors accept it, we’re safe.”
In reality:
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Directors remain responsible for the accounts
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Auditors express an opinion, not ownership
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Passing immaterial errors does not shift responsibility
This distinction is important, especially if issues surface later.
How SMEs Can Work Better With Materiality (Instead of Fighting It)
1. Focus on Big, Risky, Judgmental Areas
Spend more time on:
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Provisions
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Accruals
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Revenue recognition
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Related party balances
These areas attract audit attention for good reason.
2. Don’t Over-Explain Trivial Items
Flooding auditors with explanations for immaterial items:
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Slows down the audit
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Distracts from real risks
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Increases friction
Let materiality guide effort.
3. Ask the Right Question
Instead of asking:
“Why didn’t you check everything?”
Ask:
“What areas matter most from an audit risk perspective?”
This leads to better discussions and smoother audits.
Why Materiality Ultimately Protects SMEs
Materiality:
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Keeps audit fees reasonable
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Prevents unnecessary disruption
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Focuses attention where it actually matters
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Allows timely completion of audits
Without materiality, audits would be:
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Prohibitively expensive
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Operationally impossible
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Of little practical value
Final Thoughts
Auditors don’t check every transaction because they don’t need to—and because doing so would not make financial statements more useful.
Materiality ensures that audits focus on:
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What influences decisions
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What carries risk
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What affects the true and fair view
For Singapore SMEs, understanding materiality helps:
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Set realistic expectations
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Reduce audit frustration
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Improve cooperation with auditors
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Achieve faster, cleaner audits
Materiality is not about lowering standards—it is about applying professional judgment to deliver meaningful assurance.